Definition of Seawoman

1. a mermaid [n SEAWOMEN] - See also: mermaid

Lexicographical Neighbors of Seawoman

seawards
seaware
seawares
seawaters
seaway
seaways
seaweed
seaweedlike
seaweeds
seaweedy
seawife
seawives
seawolf
seawolves
seawoman (current term)
seawomen
seaworm
seaworms
seaworthier
seaworthiest
seaworthiness
seaworthinesses
seaworthy
seaze
seazed
seazes
seazing
seb-
sebacate

Literary usage of Seawoman

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Dublin University Magazine: A Literary and Political Journal (1860)
"... seawoman ¡us spirited as our heroine to abstain from boarding a British bark t Again, the age was one when naval adventure, as exhibited in Raleigh, ..."

2. The Silence of Amor [and] Where the Forest Murmurs by William Sharp (1910)
"It is as though a seawoman rose and fell, idly swam or idly swung this way and that, asleep on the tide: nothing visible of her wave-grey body but only her ..."

3. The Bibelot: A Reprint of Poetry and Prose for Book Lovers, Chosen in Part by Thomas Bird Mosher, John Keats (1904)
"You are a strange love for a seawoman," he said: "and why do you go putting your earth-heart to her sea-heart ?" The man said he did not know, ..."

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